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Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCalifornia Institute of Technology
SPWG Orbit Study
UVS
11/16/2016
Juno Project
Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCalifornia Institute of Technology
2 Juno Project
Effect of Longer Duration Mission
• Jupiter orbits the Sun in 11.86 years, so in 1 year it moves ~30°• For GRAV orbits, Juno’s spin axis is pointed within 11° of the Sun• UVS can look ±30° from Juno’s spin plane•At >1 year, UVS no longer sees the northern auroral oval much, and the effect gets worse with time
14-day orbit mission 53-day orbit mission
Sun
Sun
Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCalifornia Institute of Technology
3 Juno Project
UVS Auroral Visibility
• Bottom line: UVS view of northern aurora is very poor after PJ9!
Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCalifornia Institute of Technology
4 Juno Project
Summary
• Once the mission goes past November 2017 (~PJ9), UVS will have a worse and worse view of the northern auroral oval, and will often be unable to provide context imaging for the in situ instruments• On the plus side, the view of the southern auroral oval is very good throughout the mission (and has much lower radiation)•Assuming the later (i.e., >PJ9) orbits are GRAV orbits (i.e., spin axis within 11° of the Sun), then there are no Sun-related issues for UVS• If any MWR orientations are used in the later orbits, then there will be substantial Sun-related issues for UVS• In any MWR cross track orientation (with S/C +Z pointed at JNP, as proposed for orbits 12 and/or 18) the Sun will go directly into the UVS aperture on each and every spin - we didn’t design UVS for this!
•Although UVS would autonomously protect itself, we consider this a poor use of the instrument and would likely shut down for the duration of any planned MWR cross track orientations